The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Sun powers to 200m freestyle world gold

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BUDAPEST: Chinese superstar Sun Yang won the men’s 200m freestyle gold at the world aquatics championsh­ips on Tuesday to add to his Olympic title in the same event.

Sun touched the wall first in one minute 44.39 seconds with Townley Haas of the United States taking silver, at 0.65sec back, while Russia’s Aleksandr Krasnykh earned bronze at 0.84.

“I paid attention to detail and followed the instructio­ns of my coach,” said Sun, who punched the water in triumph after his victory.

This was Sun’s second gold of these championsh­ips after his victory in the 400m freestyle final on Sunday.

He will bid for the treble in Wednesday’s 800m freestyle final -- the event he has dominated for the last three world championsh­ips since 2011 in Shanghai.

Sun timed his 200m race to perfection.

He was fourth at the halfway point, but had caught leader and defending champion James Guy of Great Britain, who finished fifth, by the final turn and powered home to victory.

His win means the 25-year-old Sun is now the 200m freestyle champion at both the worlds and Olympics, after his victory at the Rio de Janeiro Games last year.

The freestyle expert now has nine gold medals to his name spanning four world championsh­ips.

He holds a world title in each of the 200m, 400m, 800m and 1500m freestyle events.

Haas said he pushed through the pain barrier to grab silver.

“Last 50 metres hurt,” said the 20-year-old, a gold medallist in the 4x100m relay in Budapest. “I couldn’t see Sun Yang, but I could see James Guy’s arms so in my head I thought ‘I’ve got to stay ahead of him’, then I put my head down and kept kicking.”

Guy, the 2015 world champion, was disappoint­ed, especially after Britain’s double golds on Monday when Adam Peaty won the 100m breaststro­ke and Ben Proud took the 50m butterfly title.

“It was very disappoint­ing, yesterday I did it exactly the same way, I felt like I had more left to give on the last leg, especially towards the finish,” said Guy.

“With my roommate (Peaty) winning gold and Ben Proud winning gold, I want to get there too, but everything happens for a reason and I have a four-year plan,” he added, with an eye on the Tokyo 2020 Olympics.

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